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Your Partner in Recruitment
for Travel, Hospitality & Leisure
in Germany

As a specialized Travel, Hospitality & Leisure recruitment agency in Germany, we support companies in attracting and securing skilled professionals across these sectors. Our approach is rooted in a strong understanding of market dynamics, talent availability, and the specific operational challenges faced by these industries.

We work alongside international groups and local businesses to recruit profiles ranging from operational specialists to senior leadership roles. Each assignment is handled with a tailored methodology, combining sector expertise, local market insight, and a rigorous candidate evaluation process to ensure long-term alignment between talent and business needs.

Our Expertise as a Travel, Hospitality & Leisure Recruitment Agency

As a specialized Executive Search consultancy for the Travel, Hospitality & Leisure industry, we support companies in securing senior and strategic talent within complex, fast-moving environments. Our recruitment approach delivers long-term value through the following areas of expertise:

  • Sector-Specific Leadership Insight: We understand the operational, commercial, and customer-driven challenges of hospitality, TravelTech, travel agencies, entertainment, corporate groups, and quick service restaurants. Our consultants identify leaders who can perform in demanding, service-oriented settings.
  • Customer Experience and Brand Excellence: We focus on executives capable of shaping consistent customer experiences, strengthening brand positioning, and aligning talent strategy with evolving consumer expectations.
  • Sustainable Performance and Growth: Our search methodology prioritizes long-term fit, leadership impact, and cultural alignment to support sustainable growth in a rapidly evolving Travel, Hospitality & Leisure market.

Our Recruitment Experts

Specialized Teams Travel, Hospitality & Leisure Recruitment in Germany

As a specialized Travel, Hospitality & Leisure recruitment agency in Germany, our experienced team supports companies across the DACH region in attracting and securing high-impact talent. With decades of combined expertise and an extensive professional network, we identify leaders who combine operational excellence with innovation, adapt quickly to changing market conditions, and engage teams effectively.

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Our Areas of Expertise as a Travel, Hospitality & Leisure Recruitment Agency

International
Recruitment Services for:

  • Airliner
  • Airports
  • Car Rentals & Car Sharing
  • Hospitality
  • Hotel Owning Companies/Private Equity
  • Cruises
  • TravelTech
  • Travel & Event Agencies
  • DMC's
  • Entertainment
  • QSR's

Our references

Our Travel, Hospitality & Leisure recruiters fill roles such as:

  • CEO, CFO, COO, CTO, CCO, CSO, CMO, CHRO
  • Managing Director
  • Regional General Manager
  • Country Manager
  • (S)VP all Finance, Operations, Commercial, Sales, Marketing, Human Ressources, Customer Journey
  • Regional/Area Manager
  • Director Quality, Health & Safety
  • Director/VP Flight Operations
  • Director/VP Customer Experience
  • Head of/Director/VP BD - Sales - KAM

Why Choose us for your Travel, Hospitality & Leisure Recruitment?

Specialized Recruitment Solutions for the Travel, Hospitality & Leisure Sector in Germany

We support airlines, hotel groups, cruise operators, car rental companies, TravelTech firms, travel agencies, and entertainment brands in securing executive and senior leadership talent. As a specialized Travel, Hospitality & Leisure recruitment agency in Germany, our consultants bring deep sector insight and a strong understanding of leadership requirements within service-driven and highly competitive environments.

Candidates, if you are looking for a job, send us your CV by completing the submit CV form.

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Integrating ESG into Your Business Strategy
MPG Germany
/ Categories: en

Integrating ESG into Your Business Strategy

The Potential of Environmental, Social, and Governance Factors to Drive Sustainable Growth and Ethical Investment

The Importance of ESG Strategy in Business Strategy

ESG (Environmental, Social and Governance) represent three central factors in measuring the sustainability and ethical impact of an investment in a company or business. Until January 2023, ESG was neither a law nor a directive, but rather a set of criteria to evaluate how a company performs in terms of sustainability, which was and is crucial for stakeholders and investors.

The importance of ESG has grown significantly, leading to various regulations and directives in different countries and regions that require companies to report on their ESG performance.

The Impact of ESG Strategy on Business Operations

Since January 5th, 2023, EU rules require large companies and listed companies to publish regular reports, to disclose information on what they see as the risks and opportunities arising from social and environmental issues, and on the impact of their activities on people and the environment. The Corporate Sustainability Reporting Directive (CSRD) entered into force. Starting in the financial year 2024, companies will be required to apply the new rules for the first time, according to predetermined standards.

ESG Integration in Business Strategy: Compliance with Regulations 

Civil society organisations, consumers and other stakeholders evaluate the sustainability performance of companies to ensure compliance with the European Green Deal (no net emissions of greenhouse gases by 2050, economic growth decoupled from resource use, no person and no place left behind. One third of the 1.8 trillion Euro investments from the NextGenerationEU Recovery Plan, and the EU´s seven-year budget will finance the European Green Deal).

Every company, even smaller ones, not yet subject to the new law, should start to implement ESG by improving their efforts significantly. Investments will align accordingly. There are voluntary frameworks besides regulations and directives. The stock exchanges have requirements and guidelines for listed companies regarding ESG disclosures. In some jurisdictions, fiduciaries like pension fund managers may have a duty to consider ESG factors as part of their responsibility to act in the best interests of their beneficiaries.

Even in the absence of legal requirements, investors put pressure on companies to disclose and perform as for ESG.

Sustainability embraces Environmental, Social and Governmental factors.

Environmental, Social, and Governance Factors in ESG Strategy 

Environmental Factors in ESG Strategy

Refers to how a company tries to improve its impact on nature. This includes

  • Energy use and efficiency
  • Climate change strategy
  • Carbon footprint reduction
  • Waste reduction
  • Pollution
  • Natural resource conservation
  • Biodiversity
  • Treatment of animals

Social Factors in ESG Strategy

Examines how the company implements and manages relationships with employees, suppliers, customers, and the communities where it operates.  This encompasses

  • Employee relations and diversity (DEI)
  • Working conditions / labour laws
  • Fair pay
  • Local communities
  • Conflict
  • Health and safety
  • Responsible supply chain partnerships

Governance Factors in ESG Strategy

Refers to the company´s leadership, executive pay, audits, internal controls, and shareholder rights. It covers

  • Corporate governance
  • Risk management
  • Compliance
  • Ethical business practices
  • Accounting integrity and transparency
  • Executive compensation
  • Board composition
  • Audit committee structure
  • Shareholder rights

Assessing ESG Factors in Your Business Strategy

Companies of different industries do have a different impact and varying focus points depending on the product or service they produce and sell. It is not always obvious how your organization embraces the above mentioned factors. Think of a construction company, a bank, and a gold mine.

Needless to say, that the assessment of the overall situation is the first step of implementing an effective ESG strategy.

  1. Assessment of ESG

Determine which of the above factors are more or less relevant for your company. Understand priorities and grade of impact. Conduct an ESG audit or review and assess the company´s current ESG performance.

  1. Set goals

What do you want to reach, which aspects do you want to improve in which time. Set clear ESG objectives like reducing carbon footprint, enhancing diversity and inclusion, or ensuring ethical supply chains. Always be aware of the  impact´s significance and the costs of implementing and not implementing a better strategy.

  1. Develop policies

Develop a policy and action plan. For example, an environmental policy might set recycling targets or promote energy – saving measures. Implement policies that promote sustainable and ethical practices.

  1. Stakeholder engagement

Engage employees and suppliers, customers, and investors, involve them in the process.  Inform them and gather feedback. Build trust.

  1. Training

Train employees and leadership on the importance of ESG, and how they can contribute.

  1. Transparency and authenticity

Regularly report on ESG performance, both internally and externally. Consider using standardized frameworks like the Global Reporting Initiative (GRI) or the Sustainability Accounting Standards Board (SASB) for reporting. Represent what you decide as policy.

  1. Review and iterate

Continuously review ESG performance and make necessary adjustments to stay on track with goals.

ESG, implementing sustainability policies in a company is a core business decision. Make sure it is not just a side effort but a central component of a company´s strategy. The future and legislative will require this.

Besides laws and directives, the decision of the extent takes place on the leadership level. Once decided, where do you structurally and strategically implement the realisation of set goals?

Structurally implementing sustainability requires a systematic approach, integrating in operations and company culture step by step.

For operations, apply similar steps to those chosen for the company as a whole:

Operational assessment, sustainable procurement, enhancement of resource efficiency, emission and pollution control, sustainable transportation, investment in technology and innovation that boost operational efficiency, implementation of tech solutions that monitor and manage resource consumption, certifications and standard controls, preparedness for crisis in case of environmental accidents.

To implement sustainability in the company culture means to ensure that sustainable principles and values become a natural part of how employees think, act, and interact. As a leader you give the example. You integrate the sustainability policy in the onboarding program. You organize internal campaigns. You look for feedback and dialogue. You incentivize, recognize and reward. You collaborate and form partnerships with NGOs, industry peers and community groups.

Requirements and compliance of sustainability will rise, and companies cannot neglect this.

So far skills to implement sustainability are integrated in requirements of an operational or managerial role. The overall process is hard to optimize this way.

Strategic Planning for ESG in Different Business Structures

Depending on the structure of your company -

  • functional: organized around functions as marketing, finance, HR, and production
  • divisional: organized around products, projects or geographical regions
  • matrix: elements of both, functional and divisional
  • flat or horizontal: few or no middle management levels
  • team based: team based instead of functions or divisions
  • hybrid: combination of multiple designs
  • holacracy: power is distributed throughout the organization, roles are defined around the work, not individuals

- you may decide how to integrate and execute sustainability, who to attribute responsibility and coordinate with departments.

Creating Dedicated Sustainability Departments

Another option, more likely to occur in the future when requirements and compliance become more complex, is to create a sustainability department with particularly educated and skilled professionals. They analyse and coordinate all processes. They know what to look at from the very beginning. These are roles who studied sustainability as a specific subject, a CSO Chief Sustainability Officer (CSO) or Director of Sustainability, Sustainability Managers, Data Analysts, Environmental Specialists, Social Responsibility Specialists, Communications Specialists. We are still in a transitional process where companies and recruiters look for skilled professionals for functions or divisions who have some knowledge in sustainability. Sustainability departments will be the future and inevitable.

Maintaining Authenticity in ESG Strategy

Sustainability is a correct and necessary approach and a must to be implemented everywhere. However, be aware of connections and intricacies willingly or accidentally ignored in the name of ESG and the Green Act.

To automate in order to avoid the usage of paper may at first glance be logical. But is automation really sustainable? To what extent? When does the “green amortisation process” start and where does it end?

Sustainability, ESG should not be abused to get finance, or go with the political and “business Zeitgeist”.

We should approach ESG in a critical way, ask, investigate, always be authentic and optimize in the sense of protecting our planet and reinforcing human sustainability.

Sustainability is the commitment to our future.

 

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